There's a reason for that. “Synchronized estrus is thought to increase reproductive success in the pride,” says Mweetwa, a National Geographic emerging explorer. Having cubs at the same time means that mother lions can rely on each other to nurse, babysit, and protect the youngsters.

This safety in numbers also allows more lions to survive to adulthood. Predation is a great threat to small, vulnerable babies in any species, but if all babies are born at the same time, there are only so many that predators can eat.

If young are born at different times throughout the year, predators could use them as a steady source of food.

Even so, many still die: More than half of all African lion cubs don’t make it past their first year. They're at risk from predation, disease, abandonment, starvation, and being killed by an outside male.

When male lions strike out on their own, they will challenge another male for control of his harem. If the interloper succeeds, he'll kill all the cubs, which brings the females into estrus, or heat, again.

Though many other animals come into heat at the same time, fewer species go into heat when their young die. Instead, most go into heat seasonally, including most wild species of hooved mammals, which only give birth in the spring. Male deer testosterone peaks in fall, during the “rut,” when they will compete for and mate with females. Does are pregnant during the winter and give birth around May and June, when warmer weather helps fawns survive.

If lions had periods, lionesses within a pride might get them at roughly the same time. But lions don't menstruate: The only mammals that menstruate overtly the way that humans do are some other primates and a few species of bats and rodents.

A persistent myth is that people living in close proximity—such as several women sharing a dorm in college—synchronize their estrus cycles, which is evidenced by having periods around the same time. This idea, which caught on due to research by psychologist Martha McClintock in 1971, has been discredited in several studies since.

Because women have slightly different menstrual cycles, there is a good chance that, if two women spend enough time together, they will eventually match cycles.

“It’s just a mathematical property of irregular rhythms, and rhythms of different lengths,” says Schank. He adds that it’s human nature to notice when things match, but not to notice when they don’t match.

Since menstruation also wastes nutrients and can attract predators, with all the other problems that lion cubs face it’s lucky that at least lionesses don’t have periods.

Thandiwe Mweetwa is a Big Cat's Initiative Grantee, working to save lions in Zambia. The National Geographic Society’s Big Cats Initiative is a long-term effort to halt the decline of lions, leopards, cheetah and other big cats in the wild. The initiative supports efforts to save big cats through assessment, on-the-ground conservation, education, and global public-awareness campaigns. Learn more about the initiative.

There's a reason for that. “Synchronized estrus is thought to increase reproductive success in the pride,” says Mweetwa, a National Geographic emerging explorer. Having cubs at the same time means that mother lions can rely on each other to nurse, babysit, and protect the youngsters.

This safety in numbers also allows more lions to survive to adulthood. Predation is a great threat to small, vulnerable babies in any species, but if all babies are born at the same time, there are only so many that predators can eat.

If young are born at different times throughout the year, predators could use them as a steady source of food.

Even so, many still die: More than half of all African lion cubs don’t make it past their first year. They're at risk from predation, disease, abandonment, starvation, and being killed by an outside male.

When male lions strike out on their own, they will challenge another male for control of his harem. If the interloper succeeds, he'll kill all the cubs, which brings the females into estrus, or heat, again.

Though many other animals come into heat at the same time, fewer species go into heat when their young die. Instead, most go into heat seasonally, including most wild species of hooved mammals, which only give birth in the spring. Male deer testosterone peaks in fall, during the “rut,” when they will compete for and mate with females. Does are pregnant during the winter and give birth around May and June, when warmer weather helps fawns survive.

If lions had periods, lionesses within a pride might get them at roughly the same time. But lions don't menstruate: The only mammals that menstruate overtly the way that humans do are some other primates and a few species of bats and rodents.

A persistent myth is that people living in close proximity—such as several women sharing a dorm in college—synchronize their estrus cycles, which is evidenced by having periods around the same time. This idea, which caught on due to research by psychologist Martha McClintock in 1971, has been discredited in several studies since.

Because women have slightly different menstrual cycles, there is a good chance that, if two women spend enough time together, they will eventually match cycles.

“It’s just a mathematical property of irregular rhythms, and rhythms of different lengths,” says Schank. He adds that it’s human nature to notice when things match, but not to notice when they don’t match.

Since menstruation also wastes nutrients and can attract predators, with all the other problems that lion cubs face it’s lucky that at least lionesses don’t have periods.

Thandiwe Mweetwa is a Big Cat's Initiative Grantee, working to save lions in Zambia. The National Geographic Society’s Big Cats Initiative is a long-term effort to halt the decline of lions, leopards, cheetah and other big cats in the wild. The initiative supports efforts to save big cats through assessment, on-the-ground conservation, education, and global public-awareness campaigns. Learn more about the initiative.